Young J. Edgar: Hoover, the Red Scare, and the Assault on Civil Liberties

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Author: Kenneth D. Ackerman

ISBN-10: 0786717750

ISBN-13: 9780786717750

Category: Police & Law Enforcement Officers - Biography

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In 1919, when J. Edgar Hoover was 24 years old, a New York City postal clerk discovered sixteen bombs wrapped in individual packages — America’s first instance of homegrown terrorism. Then-Attorney General Palmer vowed a crackdown and enlisted Hoover as his deputy. Amid the hysteria, details of abuses emerged, Palmer fell, and the rise of J. Edgar Hoover began.Hoover’s drive to gain immense power, as well as his coolness and calculation, is explored in Young J. Edgar.With the Palmer raid a as a lens through which to view the terror–hysteria of post-9/11 America, Young J. Edgar reaches the heart of our modern debate over personal freedom in a time of war and fear. Publishers Weekly Ackerman, a Washington lawyer (Boss Tweed), examines the "red scare" hysteria that swept the country in 1919. The linchpin in the government's actions was the notorious Palmer Raids, a series of raids and arrests ostensibly designed to rid the country of anarchists and Communists. Though many at the time believed J. Edgar Hoover played only a small role in the raids, in fact they were organized by Hoover, then only a 24-year-old Department of Justice agent who Ackerman describes as possessing an uncanny ability to please his superiors, a preternatural ability to attend to detail and a dangerously distorted moral compass. The mixture of Hoover and the other personalities prominent in the story—Clarence Darrow, Emma Goldman, Eugene Debs and Felix Frankfurter, to name a few—makes for a compelling story that features demagogues; terrorists; a gullible, xenophobic public; rogue law enforcement officials; and good guys, both in and out of government, who discredit the raids. Ackerman captures well the pathological character of the young Hoover and argues effectively that there is a cautionary tale in the corrosive effect of the denial of civil liberties and extralegal measures employed in the red scare raids. Illus. (June)Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Denials     1Bombs     9Bombs     11Edgar     37Edgar     39Bureaucrats     50Race Riots     60Radical Division     63Reds     71Strikes     82Partners     87The First Raid     93Thrombosis     95New York     102Emma     107The First Raid     113Centralia     124Criminal Court     128"Parlor Bolsheviks"     133Harvard     135Post     141Free Speech     147The Big Raid     153The Buford     155Demands     164Final Plans     170Chicago     176The Big Raid     180Chaos     187Chaos     189Lloyd     197Hearings     201Triumph     207Cheated     213Resistance     215Darrow     217Paterson     229Candidate     234Double Cross     236Boston     241Truss     250Plain Words     256Reaction     258Impeachment     263Communist Labor     270Gagged     277Salsedo     282Exposure     287Day in Court     289Payback     295Not Guilty     301Twelve Lawyers     306Palmer     312Verdicts     317Politics     319Verdict     329Empire     338Walsh     347Stone     356Survivor     364Fooled     372Legacy     383Notes     411Bibliography     453Acknowledgments     461Index     463